Ken Millard
Bryce Alderton
He might give his allegiance to Woodbridge High in baseball these
days, but Ken Millard remains a Costa Mesa fixture.
A 37-year resident of the city, Millard, who guided the Estancia
baseball program during its heyday from 1978 to 1993, works part time
as a bartender at the Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club, alongside the
club’s starter Kyle Wilson, who played under Millard.
Wilson was a two-time All-Pacific Coast League selection before
playing two years at Orange Coast College and then Long Beach State.
“I don’t know how [Wilson] didn’t get drafted, he got
[shortchanged],” Millard said. “I can see him now, he just physically
matured as time went on. Just give him the ball and you had a chance
to win.” This from a man who coached future major leaguers in Rich
Amaral and Jeff Gardner.
One of Millard’s most satisfying memories of his days coaching and
teaching physical education at Estancia was raising “thousands of
dollars” to revamp the baseball field in 1982.
“Things like dugouts don’t come cheap,” Millard, who lives with
wife Jean, said. “The kids pitched in and sponsored dances and car
washes. We were fortunate to have a great group of parents to help
get that field done in a year.”
Millard, 70, teamed with the late Paul Troxel to lead the Eagles
to the CIF playoffs eight times through 1994.
With difficulties fielding enough players for lower-level teams
along with struggles raising money to fund the Eagles’ program,
Millard said it was time for him to leave the Costa Mesa campus and
coach elsewhere.
Having formed friendships with current Woodbridge coaches Bob
Flint and Bruce Ickes, Millard, a native of Chicago, decided to take
a chance with the Warriors. He has made the adjustment just fine.
“[Flint] and I used to be arch enemies, but now we’ve become
friends,” Millard said.
From the time he grew up playing the game with his buddies in
Chicago to spending a year in the minors with the White Sox, Millard
has kept baseball at the forefront.
The man who spent two years in the U.S. Navy and who has
bachelor’s and master’s degrees in physical education remembered the
freedom and challenges of trying to find a field to play on in the
blue-collar section of the city.
“Three or four kids learned to play baseball by being with each
other ... shagging balls and hitting to one another,” Millard
recalled. “The neighborhood businesses would sponsor us so we could
reserve the fields. We had to scrounge, but that was the way life
was.”
Millard, who occasionally substitute teaches in the Irvine Unified
School District, “rode the coattails” of a close friend who urged him
to focus on the game.
“I put every moment into being a crappy ball player,” Millard said
with a chuckle.
A laugh that followed with many more stories and memories, of
which Millard maintained his modesty.
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